why does the back ache? - mehta spine · 2018. 11. 27. · low back pain major health and...

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Why does the back ache?

Jwalant S. Mehta MBBS, MS (Orth), D (Orth), FRCS, MCh (Orth), FRCS (Orth)

Consultant Spinal Surgeon

Outline of the talk: ‘Why does the back ache?’

• Working definitions

• Scope of the problem

• Pathologic and clinic basis

• How you could approach this problem

Age or Mileage

• Changing expectations from life

• Longevity

• Doing more…….

• ……..for longer!

Use and abuse our backs

• Sitting habits

• Body habits

• Smoking

• Diet

• Sedentary lifestyle

• Lack of exercise

• TV / Social media / Internet

Low back pain

• Major Health and socio-economic issue

• Time off work in the economically active

• Point prevalence: 58 - 84%

Low back pain

• Site:

• Below12th rib

• Above Gluteal fold

• Cause:

• Specific (Cause suspected)

• Non-specific (??)

• Severity:

• Acute: < 6 weeks

• Chronic: > 3 mo

VOMIT • Victim

• Of

• Medical

• Imaging

• Technology

Pain generators

• Inter-vertebral discs

• Facet joints

• Vertebral body failure

• Spinal malalignment

Inter-vertebral disc ‘Disc’

Cellular pathology leading to disc degeneration

Micro & Macroscopic changes in the degenerate disc

The degenerative cascade

The motion segment

• Inter-vertebral disc

• End-plate: cartilage, bone

• Facet joints

• Passive restraints: Ligaments

Disc height and degeneration

Disc v facet arthritis

Discogenic v Facetogenic

Flexion Extension

Facet arthritis

Facetogenic back pain

• Back pain

• Thigh pain

• Worse on extension

• Pain on getting out of bed

• Pain on arising from sitting

Lumbar canal stenosis • Narrowing of the spinal canal

• Neural compression

• Directional compression

• Constitutional shape

Degenerate spondylolisthesis

Treatment options

Facet joint blocks

Nerve root blocks Epidural injections

Discography

Never too early!

• Not everyone needs an operation

• Understanding expectations

• Tailor management

• Review over time

Treatment options

Lumbar decompression

Treatment options

Postero-lateral fusion

Inter-body fusion

Minimally invasive surgery

Truncal mal-alignment

Life is a kyphosing event

Spondylolysis

Degenerate deformity

• Loss of ability to stand upright

• Mechanical dis-advantage

• Asymmetric degeneration

• Spinal column ‘collapse’

• Sacral slope (SS)

• Pelvic tilt (PT)

• Pelvic incidence (PI)

Pelvic measures

PRE

POST

Spectrum of pathology • Osteoporosis

• Discs and facet joints

• Failure of the spinal column

When to refer

• Axial back pain

• Radiation: thigh pain; claudication; groin pain

• Myotomal radiation

• Refer early…...not all need surgery

When to refer

• Unable to stand upright

• New ‘forward gaze’ issues

• Static or dynamic ‘stoop’

• Loss of ‘height’

• ‘Discogenic back pain’

• ‘Physiotherapy v spinal fusion’

• Clinical findings

• Patient profile

• Patients’ expectations, activities

• Imaging findings

Discogenic back pain. Mehta et al http://bestpractice.bmj.com

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